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Kafka's motto

Franz Kafka (July 3, 1883 - June 3, 1924), nationality belongs to the Austro-Hungarian Empire (Austria). Born in Prague, the capital of the Czech Republic (then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire) into a Jewish businessman family, he was a 20th century German novelist. Together with French writer Marcel Proust and Irish writer James Joyce, he is known as the pioneer and master of Western modernist literature.

There are quite a lot of maxims, and I have chosen ten that I think are very interesting:

1. The real road is on a rope, which is not taut at a high place, but It's close to the ground. It is not so much for people to walk on as it is for stumbling people.

2. All human mistakes are nothing more than impatience, disrupting step-by-step procedures too hastily, and using specious stakes to circle specious things.

3. From a certain point on, there is no longer any way out. This can be achieved.

4. Critical moments in human development are continuous. So it makes sense for those revolutionary spiritual movements to regard everything that has gone before as nothing, because nothing has happened yet.

5. One of the most effective temptation methods of "evil" is challenge.

6. Like an autumn road, it is covered with dry leaves before it has time to be swept away.

7. A cage is looking for a bird.

8. I have never been to this place: my breathing is different from before. There is a star shining next to the sun, which is more dazzling than the sun.

9. There may be knowledge about the devil, but there is no belief in the devil, because there is nothing more devilish than the devil.

10. Sin always comes openly and is immediately caught by the senses. It comes down to its many roots, but these roots are not necessarily uprooted.

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